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The Milky Way Galaxy
b
c
a
d
Take a Giant Step Outside the Milky Way
Artist's Conception
Example
(not to
scale)
Take a Giant Step Outside the Milky Way
Artist's Conception
Example
(not to
scale)
Perseus arm
from above ("face-on")
see disk and bulge
Orion arm
Sun
Cygnus arm
Carina arm
from the side
("edge-on")
Another galaxy: NGC 4414. The Milky Way roughly resembles it.
M31
The Three Main Structural Components of the Milky Way
1. Disk
- 30,000 pc diameter (or 30 kpc)
- contains young and old stars, gas, dust. Has spiral structure
- vertical thickness roughly 100 pc - 2 kpc (depending on component.
Most gas and dust in thinner layer, most stars in thicker layer)
2. Halo
- at least 30 kpc across
- contains globular clusters, old stars, little gas and dust,
much "dark matter"
- roughly spherical
3. Bulge
- About 4 kpc across
- old stars, some gas, dust
- central black hole of 3 x 106 (A.K.A 3
million)solar masses
- spherical
Shapley (1917) found that Sun was not at center of Milky Way
Shapley used distances to variable “RR Lyrae” stars (a kind of Horizontal
Branch star) in Globular Clusters to determine that Sun was 16 kpc from
center of Milky Way. Modern value 8 kpc.
Stellar Orbits
Halo: stars and globular clusters swarm around center of Milky Way. Very
elliptical orbits with random orientations. They also cross the disk.
Bulge: similar to halo.
Disk: rotates.
Precise Distance to Galactic Center
Distance = 7.94 +/- 0.42 kpc
SgrA*
Eisenhauer et al. 2003
Orbital motion 6.37 mas/yr
Rotation of the Disk
Sun moves at 225 km/sec around center. An orbit takes 240 million years.
Stars closer to center take less time to orbit. Stars further from center take
longer.
=> rotation not rigid like a phonograph record or a merry-go-round. Rather,
"differential rotation".
Over most of disk, rotation velocity is roughly constant.
The "rotation
curve" of the
Milky Way
Spiral Structure of Disk
Spiral arms best traced by:
Young stars and clusters
Emission Nebulae
HI
Molecular Clouds
(old stars to a lesser extent)
Disk not empty between arms,
just less material there.
Problem: How do spiral arms survive?
Given differential rotation, arms should be stretched and smeared out after
a few revolutions (Sun has made 20 already):
The Winding Dilemma
The spiral should end up like this:
Real structure of Milky
Way (and other spiral
galaxies) is more loosely
wrapped.
Proposed solution:
Arms are not material moving together, but mark peak of a
compressional wave circling the disk:
A Spiral Density Wave
Traffic-jam analogy:
Traffic jam on a loop caused by merging
Now replace cars by stars
and gas clouds. The traffic
jams are actually due to the
stars' collective gravity.
The higher gravity of the
jams keeps stars in them
for longer. Calculations
and computer simulations
show this situation can be
maintained for a long time.
Molecular gas clouds pushed together in arms too => high density of
clouds => high concentration of dust => dust lanes.
Also, squeezing of clouds initiates collapse within them => star formation.
Bright young massive stars live and die in spiral arms. Emission nebulae
mostly in spiral arms.
So arms always contain same types of objects, but individual objects come and go.
90% of Matter in Milky Way is Dark Matter
Gives off no detectable radiation. Evidence is from rotation curve:
10
Rotation
Velocity
(AU/yr) 5
Solar System Rotation Curve: when
almost all mass at center, velocity
decreases with radius ("Keplerian")
1
1
10
20
30
R (AU)
observed curve
Milky Way
Rotation
Curve
Curve if Milky
Way ended
where visible
matter pretty
much runs out.
Not enough radiating matter at large R to explain rotation
curve => "dark" matter!
Dark matter must be about 90% of the mass!
Composition unknown. Probably mostly exotic particles that
don't interact with ordinary matter at all (except gravity).
Some may be brown dwarfs, dead white dwarfs …
Most likely it's a dark halo surrounding the Milky Way.
Mass of Milky Way
6 x 1011 solar masses within 40 kpc of center.
Seeing into the center of the Milky Way
Seeing into the center of the Milky Way